|  |  |  |   L. Neil Smith's THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE Number 227, June 8, 2003   "Why Johnny Is A Bored Ignoramus"
 Exclusive to TLE It's late May. The kids are out of school, the last spring soccer games have been played, and it's time for the highly-anticipated (and simultaneously dreaded) event of the season: the annual dance recital. As long as my seven-year-old daughter can remember, she's wanted to be a 
dancer. The first time my family attended a Sioux City Explorers 
 My daughter's gone from a single class (pre-ballet), to four classes 
next year: ballet, tap, drill team, and baton. She attends dance 
competitions and wins awards with her drill team. 
 
 Last Saturday night, Sandy Keene celebrated her thirtieth year as a 
dance teacher. Sandy has a large number of students around the Sioux 
City, Iowa metro area. Consequently, the venue is a large auditorium at 
a local college, the dress rehearsal lasts all day, and the recital 
itself is around four hours long. 
 
 Nor does she make it easy on parents: most dancers are in more than one 
class, and the numbers are staggered to make it virtually impossible to 
leave early. If they weren't, there'd be no audience by the end of the 
show. Parents are a selfish lot: we'll gush at our own children as they 
stumble around the stage, but watching others do it is stultifyingly 
boring. 
 
 My daughter has some innate talent for dance. You can spot the talented 
kids pretty easily: they're the ones who don't have to be looking at the 
other dancers out of the corners of their eyes in order to get the steps 
right. If you put them onstage alone, they could perform unassisted. 
 
 In all of Sandy's student body, there's one child you can point to and 
say, "There's a born performer." He's around ten and reminds you of a 
young (white) Michael Jackson: very talented, obviously enjoying 
himself, and has a natural rapport with the audience. He's clearly the 
next Fred Astaire or Mikhail Baryshnikov, depending on which direction 
he happens to want to go. 
 
 By comparison, my daughter's goals are simple: she wants to take over 
Sandy's studio when Sandy retires. She plans to remain with Sandy 
indefinitely, get hired as one of the assistant teachers (something she 
can do as early as 12 or 13), go to college to major in Dance (and at my 
insistence minor in Business so she doesn't go broke her first year), 
and then return to take over Sandy's school. 
 
 For my part, I think this is a wonderful idea. One of the fascinating 
things I've noticed is that the kids who stay with Sandy the entirety of 
their pre-college years are achievers. They are without exception the 
Valedictorians, 4.0 GPA-earners, and scholarship-winners. The girl my 
daughter hugged at Lewis and Clarke Park went on the be her Class 
Valedictorian, ice skated competitively, and win a scholarship to a 
reputable university. To top it all off, the summer after she graduated, 
she was teaching my daughters to swim at Morningside College. 
 
 Nothing succeeds like success. Even if my daughter ultimately changes 
her career plans, being exposed to individuals with such high standards 
can only be good for her. 
 
 I've known for years that the current educational paradigm in America is 
hideously flawed. If you take even a brief look at the achievement of 
America's children in modern, age-segregated schools and compare it with 
the general education of the average one-room schoolhouse of a century 
ago, it's clear that the one-room schoolhouse was more successful.  
 
 My grandparents are retired cattle ranchers who never went farther than 
high school. The largest school they ever attended was the High School 
in Wasta, South Dakota with a student body of less than a hundred. 
 
 My grandparents' general educationearned almost seventy years 
agofar exceeds that of the average post-millennial high school graduate. 
 
 My grandparents' five children also attended school in a one-room 
building prior to government forcing them to make the long trip to town 
for high school. I've seen the school: it now resides on my 
grandmother's property near Pedro, South Dakota. The building is 
essentially a small, one-room trailer house (vintage 1940). If you've 
seen the movie The Long, Long Trailer
[VHS or  
DVD]
and then gutted the trailer of most of its living arrangements, you'd have the 
schoolhouse. The interior is divided by a bookshelf about fifteen feet from the 
front of the trailer: this demarcates the teacher's living quarters from the 
classroom. There is no indoor plumbing, air conditioning, or other amenities. 
 
 The walls of the schoolhouse are still lined with books. There are 
mathematics texts dating from the 1950s that would be appropriate to 
teach anything through beginning Calculus. The history and political 
science books are complete through the same time period. The literature 
is extremely eclectic: during one particularly successful 
"archaeological expedition" to the schoolhouse, I obtained a first-print 
hardback edition of 
Tarzan The Untamed
in reasonably good condition. I suspect that if one were to spend a week 
cataloging the items in the schoolhouse, there would be a small fortune  
to be made on E-Bay. 
 
 My father and his siblings, along with the children of one or two other 
families, obtained an extraordinary education in this room. Anyone with 
whom I've spoken says that it was so good that when they went to Wall 
 So what does this have to do with Sandy Keene's annual recital? 
 
 As I watched the dress rehearsal, I was struck that the reason so many 
children do so well at Sandy Keene's is that she employs the "one-room 
schoolhouse" paradigm of education. 
 
 Children at Sandy Keene's are only roughly grouped by age: the pre-
ballet class can be populated by girls anywhere from three to six years 
of age. More important than age is maturity and experience: if a three-
year-old took pre-ballet, then she can be five when she attends second-
year ballet, tap, jazz, drill team, or baton. She might be alongside a 
seven- or eight-year-old who took pre-ballet at an older age. 
 
 At about age twelve or thirteen, girls with a particular aptitude or 
interest may be hired by Sandy to assist teaching the younger children. 
"Assist" is probably a misnomer: I've spent enough time in Sandy's lobby 
to know that the older girls often teach the class: Sandy pops in every 
ten or fifteen minutes to offer words of advice or criticism. 
 
 Furthermore, Sandy's hiring practices are entirely merit-based: age and 
particularly physique is not an issue. I've seen a skinny thirteen-year-
old and an overweight sixteen-year-old teaching side-by-side. 
 
 The "one-room schoolhouse" teaching paradigm is extremely apparent at 
the recital's dress rehearsal. The older girls are instrumental: not 
only do they dance their own numbers, they're scurrying around the 
classes they teach, directing the younger children where to goin 
some cases literally carrying a stage-frightened child on and offstage. 
Their own experience makes them perfect for this job, as they can 
empathize with the perspective of children only a few years younger than 
they are. 
 
 The advantage of the one-room schoolhouse is easy to understand when you 
see it in action at Sandy Keene's recital. Both the academically-gifted 
and -challenged are given a first-class education. The gifted children 
finish their schoolwork well before everyone else and thenlike Sandy 
Keene's 13-year-old dance staffare assigned to the younger or less-
gifted children. This is advantageous for the child being tutored 
because he or she has a near-peer who can empathize with the child's 
difficulties and embarrassment. For the gifted child, their mind is being  
stretched: if they teach three younger children long division, they'll 
have to be senile before they forget how to do it themselves. 
 
 I'm lucky: my own children are very bright (probably owing to the 
genetics of their grandparents). They consistently come home complaining 
that school is boring. I estimate that they're intellectually challenged 
perhaps three hours a week. Were they in a one-room schoolhouse, 
assisting the teacher with younger classmates, they'd be challenged  
constantly. Struggling children would similarly be more likely to 
succeed. 
 
 If American education is to survive, it must completely abandon its 
current paradigm of enormous, age-segregated schools controlled by Federal 
monies and the NEA. A return to the one-room school houseeven in large 
metropolitan areaswould be a massive improvement.
 
 The barriers to this are simple: the FedGov will never willingly give up 
its centralized control of education. Nor, for that matter, are the 
State and LocalGovs. As long as we allow any government body to control 
education through funding, our children will continue to be either  
ignorami or bored stiff all day long. 
 
 The only way to cause the current paradigm to disappear is via collapse. 
Every individual must be made aware that no matter how good they think 
their local government school is, their child will be only one of two 
things on Graduation Day: an ignoramus or bored out of their mind. 
 
 Maybe both. 
 
 To hasten the collapse, it's imperative that individuals not participate 
in government schools. Home-school your children. Send them to non-
government schools. Do whatever you must to keep them out of the doors 
of a government school. When the Local, State, and FedGov whine to you 
about how it's all about money, don't listen. I could take my children 
to the schoolhouse at Pedro today, and using the books still on its 
shelves impart all the knowledge they could glean through a modern High 
School. 
 
 The current system doesn't work. It can't be tweaked, tuned, or better-
funded. The entire CONCEPT of regimented super-schools is flawed. The 
best American education is to be had from one-room schoolhouses. The 
sooner we cause the current system to collapse, the sooner your child 
will cease to be a bored ignoramus. 
 
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